Mike Myers and Jimmy Fallon staged a wacky dance-off on 'The Tonight Show,' with each representing their home countries (Canada and the United States, respectively). But there was a twist. The comedians took turns rolling a massive dice with crazy names they had to improvise dances around.
Myers rolled the name "Perpetual Motion," which he interpreted with an Austin Powers-like flair of swinging Sixties hand gestures. Fallon rolled, "Which Pocket Did I Put My Keys In?," and did a rhythmic version of a security pat-down.
Telling his rival...
Myers rolled the name "Perpetual Motion," which he interpreted with an Austin Powers-like flair of swinging Sixties hand gestures. Fallon rolled, "Which Pocket Did I Put My Keys In?," and did a rhythmic version of a security pat-down.
Telling his rival...
- 1/25/2017
- Rollingstone.com
S1 E13, 'The Bat Jar Conjecture'
To say that Sheldon does not play well with others is pretty much akin to saying that Hitler was a very naughty person. Team playing is something that he just doesn't understand, mostly due to his belief that he is always the smartest person in any situation. So what happens when he he and the boys form a team for the Physics Bowl? Hilarity!
This week's story start out with the boys having a meal as Howard tells them all some news about the new Star Trek movie, revealing that there would be a scene depicting Spock's birth. Raj comments that he'd rather see a scene depicting Spock's conception, to which Sheldon scoffs, explaining that Pon Farr is a very private affair between Vulcans. Leonard states that he'd be interested in seeing it, as Sarek and Amanda couldn't have conceived in the normal way,...
To say that Sheldon does not play well with others is pretty much akin to saying that Hitler was a very naughty person. Team playing is something that he just doesn't understand, mostly due to his belief that he is always the smartest person in any situation. So what happens when he he and the boys form a team for the Physics Bowl? Hilarity!
This week's story start out with the boys having a meal as Howard tells them all some news about the new Star Trek movie, revealing that there would be a scene depicting Spock's birth. Raj comments that he'd rather see a scene depicting Spock's conception, to which Sheldon scoffs, explaining that Pon Farr is a very private affair between Vulcans. Leonard states that he'd be interested in seeing it, as Sarek and Amanda couldn't have conceived in the normal way,...
- 4/25/2014
- Shadowlocked
DC Comics delivers another great Bat-Family graphic novel with Nightwing Volume 2: Night of the Owls. The hardcover collection contains issues 0 and 8 through 12 of the monthly title. It consists of three different story arcs that continue to show the grown-up Boy Wonder can hold his own inside and outside Gotham City.
"Bloodlines" and "The Gray Son" pit Nightwing against a powerful agent of the Court of Owls. His name is William Cobb and he is Dick Grayson's great-grandfather, trained by Haly's Circus to be a Talon since childhood. Can Nightwing foil Cobb's assassination attempt on Gotham City's mayor?
"The Tomorrow People," "Tomorrow Can't Wait," and "Inside Out" throw Nightwing in the ring with an organization calling themselves the Republic of Tomorrow led by a masked figure named Paragon. The group is intent on cleansing Gotham City of its "false" heroes and killing Nightwing for the deaths of two of their members.
"Bloodlines" and "The Gray Son" pit Nightwing against a powerful agent of the Court of Owls. His name is William Cobb and he is Dick Grayson's great-grandfather, trained by Haly's Circus to be a Talon since childhood. Can Nightwing foil Cobb's assassination attempt on Gotham City's mayor?
"The Tomorrow People," "Tomorrow Can't Wait," and "Inside Out" throw Nightwing in the ring with an organization calling themselves the Republic of Tomorrow led by a masked figure named Paragon. The group is intent on cleansing Gotham City of its "false" heroes and killing Nightwing for the deaths of two of their members.
- 8/1/2013
- by feeds@cinelinx.com (Eric Shirey)
- Cinelinx
It seems oddly fitting a movie ostensibly about mental illness should be one of the most schizophrenic releases of the past decade. Sadly this isn't meant as a compliment. Perhaps The Double Life's spastic tonal shifts, disconnected editing and its cast who seem as if they're acting in four or five different films each were intentional stylistic choices on the part of director Ning Ying (Perpetual Motion), but for the most part they're good for little more than (unintentional) hysterical laughter.
The narrative attempts to weave together two simultaneous plot threads; first a charismatic university lecturer in psychology, under pressure from his dean to curb his cavalier approach to education, has himself committed to an institution. Second, a security guard at that same institution discovers his ex-wife has also just been admitted as a patient (Zhang Jingchu, Beast Stalker, The Road, Jade Warrior, who can charitably be described as slumming...
The narrative attempts to weave together two simultaneous plot threads; first a charismatic university lecturer in psychology, under pressure from his dean to curb his cavalier approach to education, has himself committed to an institution. Second, a security guard at that same institution discovers his ex-wife has also just been admitted as a patient (Zhang Jingchu, Beast Stalker, The Road, Jade Warrior, who can charitably be described as slumming...
- 5/25/2010
- Screen Anarchy
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